Higher risk of renal disease in chronic hepatitis C patients: Antiviral therapy survival benefit in patients on hemodialysis

[Display omitted] •Increased risk of chronic kidney disease and dialysis dependency in patients with hepatitis C.•Antiviral treatment improved survival of patients with hepatitis C on hemodialysis.•High hepatitis C treatment rate in hemodialysis patients in Sweden. Several studies have shown that ch...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hepatology 2018-05, Vol.68 (5), p.904-911
Hauptverfasser: Söderholm, Jonas, Millbourn, Charlotta, Büsch, Katharina, Kövamees, Jan, Schvarcz, Robert, Lindahl, Karin, Bruchfeld, Annette
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Increased risk of chronic kidney disease and dialysis dependency in patients with hepatitis C.•Antiviral treatment improved survival of patients with hepatitis C on hemodialysis.•High hepatitis C treatment rate in hemodialysis patients in Sweden. Several studies have shown that chronic hepatitis C (CHC) infection has a negative impact on kidney function, as well as survival, in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) or on hemodialysis. The aim of this nationwide registry study was to describe renal disease in Swedish patients with CHC. In the present study, patients were identified for CHC (B18.2) and CKD (N18) according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 in the nationwide Swedish inpatient care day surgery (1997–2013) and non-primary outpatient care (2001–2013) patient registries. Hemodialysis was defined using the procedure code in the non-primary outpatient care. For each patient, up to five non-CHC diagnosed age/sex/place of residency-matched comparators were drawn from the general population at the time of diagnosis. Follow-up started at the date of CHC diagnosis and patients accrued person-time until, whichever came first, death, emigration or December 31st, 2013. Between 2001 and 2013, 42,522 patients received a CHC diagnosis. Of these patients, 2.5% (1,077/45,222) were diagnosed with CKD during 280,123 person-years, compared with 0.7% (1,454/202,694) in the matched general population comparators (1,504,765 person-years), resulting in a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 4.0. There was a 3.3–7.0-fold risk of patients with CHC requiring hemodialysis. Overall, 17% of patients with CHC receiving hemodialysis were treated for CHC; 24% in the treated cohort died compared with 56% of the untreated cohort (p 
ISSN:0168-8278
1600-0641
DOI:10.1016/j.jhep.2017.12.003